How luxury watch and jewellery houses are supporting gender equality, from the Cartier Women’s Initiative to Boucheron’s female CEO and Richard Mille’s women’s race team
- Since the #MeToo movement began, companies are realising the importance of gender equality – so Cartier worked with Expo 2020 Dubai to unveil a Women’s Pavilion
- Boucheron has acquired more female managers, Bulgari supported female scientists researching Covid-19, and Richard Mille assembled an all-women race team
The Cartier Women’s Initiative annual entrepreneurship programme, founded in 2006, aimed to drive change by empowering female entrepreneurs. Sixteen years on, Cartier’s initiative has supported at least 262 women worldwide, in sectors as diverse as pharmaceuticals, e-learning and agriculture. Besides this, the brand’s recent partnership with Expo 2020 Dubai to unveil a Women’s Pavilion marked another step forward. The pavilion “recognises and celebrates the role and achievements of women throughout history, sheds light on the challenges that women still face, and explores innovative solutions that are advancing progress around the world”.
In early March this year, Cartier Women’s Initiative – as part of its 15th anniversary celebrations – brought together its global community of changemakers in Dubai to recognise their “remarkable achievements and collectively shape the future of the programme, looking back on its evolution and footprint”. It was a big positive, says Cyrille Vigneron, president and CEO of Cartier International. “During all these years, this initiative has brought together a community of passionate social entrepreneurs who have developed successful business models improving lives around them. This community is a constant source of awe and inspiration,” he says.
Ensuring equal career opportunities for women, especially opportunities to reach top executive level, is an important parameter of gender equality so it’s inspiring to see a handful of women presiding over acclaimed luxury houses, from Victoire de Castellane, creative director of Dior Joaillerie to Catherine Renier, CEO of Jaeger-LeCoultre. By this measure, French jewellery maison Boucheron, owned by luxury conglomerate Kering, is a particularly promising place for women – headed by CEO Hélène Poulit-Duquesne, it has Claire Choisne as its creative director.